FILE - In this Friday, Jan. 20, 2017 file photo, Italian designer Riccardo Tisci acknowledges applause at the end of Givenchy Men's Fall Winter 2017-2018 fashion collection presented in Paris. Burberry has on named Riccardo Tisci as its chief creative officer, replacing Christopher Bailey. The British fashion house announced Thursday, March 1, 2018 that the Italian designer, who has spent more than a decade as creative chief at Givenchy, will take up the post March 12. (AP Photo/Francois Mori, file)

Chloe goes romantic in Paris; Kenzo pays homage to Rousseau

By THOMAS ADAMSON

Mar. 01, 2018

Kenzo channeled painter Henri Rousseau's jungle aesthetic with striped knitted skirts and tops in eye-popping colors while Manish Arora mixed the vibrant colors of the Indian subcontinent with styles in Japan.

Here are some highlights:

CHLOE PILES ON THE ROMANCE IN PARIS

French actress Isabelle Huppert and model Alexa Chung were among notables at Natacha Ramsay-Levi's sophomore effort for Chloe. The low-key designer worked romance into the house's signature '70s boho aesthetic for a strong collection in pared-down hues.

The decorative show mixed up a "kaleidoscope of identities," with romantic fluid dresses and silk shirts. High collars met long bell sleeves and lashings of lace.

Gold chains, jewelry and low slung belts added movement to already kinetic silhouettes in which skirts were cut on the bias or floppily pleated.

Model of the moment Kaia Jordan Gerber, the 16-year-old daughter of Cindy Crawford, strutted out with a gold chain adorning a beautiful eggshell-colored 70's skin coat.

But the strongest feature of the collection was its wild fur trims that showed off the skill Ramsay-Levi acquired at Louis Vuitton. A dark vanilla shirt dress had a silken fur fringe that cascaded out of horizontal paneling, even causing icy-cool U.S. Vogue Chief Anna Wintour to turn her head.

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KENZO'S HOMAGE TO HENRI ROUSSEAU

Although his day job was fashion designer, retired house-founder Kenzo Takada was an amateur artist of some talent who has painted several reproductions of "The Dream," the Henri Rousseau masterpiece.

He was first struck by the painting in 1965 when he saw it hanging in Paris' Orangery Museum. "I fell in love," Takada said.

The original two-by-three meter oil painting, which today hangs in MOMA, depicts a naked woman reclining on a chaise longue amid a jungle scene.

For each reproduction he made, Takada would paint someone he knew in place of the reclining woman, and each canvas would be hung in a different Kenzo boutique.

Ahead of their show, designers Humberto Leon and Carol Lim met with the Rousseau family to secure the rights to use the painting as a touchstone for the presentation.

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KENZO'S BANQUET SHOW

Guests arriving in the ornate Paris Mint venue could hardly believe their eyes. In a historic mirrored salon, set across long tables, tasty cheeses, exotic fruits, wines and nuts spilled out onto foliage.

Kenzo had prepared a jungle-themed Bacchic banquet.

As the show began, ushers with white aprons carried large replicas of canvas reproductions of Rousseau's. At one point, some guests were shocked when a naked woman appeared covered in body paint, in a reference to the 1910 painting's subject.

One model wrapped inside an all-encompassing 3-meter (9-foot) jungle-bush sculpture caused guests to laugh when he nearly took out one of the decor lights.

The artistic musing infused the clothes. In a stripe-heavy aesthetic, knitted skirts and tops were delivered in eye-popping colors such as Cerulean blue, bright red and yellow, evoking the hues of the jungle.

A heavy diagonal ruffle down a skirt gave it a vibrant dynamic. And myriad colored scarves were piled up on top of one other.

Elsewhere, Rousseau was more explicitly referenced through "tapestry jacquards" in tops, dresses and pants as well as in shearling coats.

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MANISH ARORA PRODUCES AN EASTERN CORNOCOPIA

At his Paris Fashion Week show, New Delhi-based Manish Arora fused the vibrant color of the Indian subcontinent with traditional and contemporary styles of Japan.

The result was explosive.

The kimono was the starting point and it was evoked from head to toe. Dramatic top knots led down to thick multicolored scarves tied like Obi belts around the neck. Faces were sometimes painted like a Geisha with big red lips. Shoes were a take on the wooden Geta clog.

In the clothing, silken kimono looks with oversize sleeves were fastened with tight belted waists and buried by multiple layers of thick fabric.

And then there were the colors. The bubblegum pink, blinding orange, reds, blues and greens seemed to hit every hue on the planet.

The vivid street style of Japan's Harajuku Girls was evoked in one blue-and-yellow look that grabbed attention.

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CARVEN'S HOMLINESS

It was a fashion-forward collection for Serge Ruffieux at Carven. Using techniques of deconstruction, color blocking and pattern blocking, the former Dior staffer showed off his extensive design repertoire.

There was a raggedly homeliness to many of the looks. They used contrasting check and floral patterns in a scruffy, deconstructed way.